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National Guard Helps 2,500 Ike Victims to Safety

ARLINGTON, Va., Sept. 15, 2008  Taking people to safe, dry places became one of the main missions for National Guard troops after Hurricane Ike rampaged through Texas and Louisiana.

Louisiana Army National Guardsmen from the 2225th Multi-Role Bridge
Company in Marrero, La., bring residents of Hackberry, La., to dry land
after the small town in the southwest portion of the state received
massive flooding caused by Hurricane Ike. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Angela
K. Fry, 528th Engineer Battalion(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.

Guard members had rescued nearly 2,000 people in Texas, the hardest-hit state, by today, and had rescued or evacuated another 343 in Louisiana, the states reported.

“We’re proud of the work our troops are doing out there,” said Army Lt. Col. James Waskom, deputy commander of Louisiana’s 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team. “But we’ve got to keep our heads in the game, because there is lots of work still out there to do.”

Texas Guard members used ground, water and air assets to help people stranded by the hurricane.

Texas troops had rescued 1,554 people with ground vehicles and boats and had rescued another 394 people with helicopters by midday today, Kristine Munn, a spokeswoman for the National Guard Bureau, reported. Furthermore, they had assisted 639 people who were not evacuated and had assessed the damage to about 500 buildings.

“The No. 1 mission is search and rescue, second is damage assessment, and third is setting up points of distribution,” Army Maj. Gen Charles Rodriguez, the Texas adjutant general, said before the storm struck. That is how it all worked out in both states.

The state had 255 trucks, 41 boats and 20 helicopters for search and rescue missions.

“Our Guardsmen have proven once again that they are the finest soldiers and airmen in America,” Army Maj. Gen. Bennett Landreneau, Louisiana’s adjutant general, said. “They are truly remarkable, working every day to assist their fellow citizens, even though in many cases their homes were flooded or damaged and their own families evacuated.”